diff --git a/Good-Governance-Calendar-%28GGC%29.md b/Good-Governance-Calendar-%28GGC%29.md index 15df5c3..be0307e 100644 --- a/Good-Governance-Calendar-%28GGC%29.md +++ b/Good-Governance-Calendar-%28GGC%29.md @@ -325,10 +325,10 @@ Major linguistic inconsistencies of the current Gregorian calendar exists. The o A key benefit of a 13-month, 28-day calendar is the opportunity to rename the months with a logical, consistent naming convention. This would eliminate the confusion and historical inaccuracy. -**- Elimination of Inaccuracy:** A new calendar would remove the paradox where "September" is the ninth month, not the seventh. This provides clarity and restores the true meaning of those ancient Latin roots if they were to be used for different, correctly numbered months, or allows for an entirely new, logical naming system. -**- Intuitive Ordering:** By using names that reflect the month's position in the sequence (e.g., First Month, Second Month, etc., or names derived from nature or a new cultural system), the order of the year becomes instantly intuitive. -**- Cultural Consistency:** A coherent naming scheme supports the overall systematic nature of the 13-month, 28-day structure, creating a unified and rational system that lacks the historical baggage and accumulated inconsistencies of the Gregorian calendar. -**- Ease of Learning:** It would be much easier for children and new users of the calendar to remember the month names and their sequence, as the name itself provides a strong clue to its position in the year. +- **Elimination of Inaccuracy:** A new calendar would remove the paradox where "September" is the ninth month, not the seventh. This provides clarity and restores the true meaning of those ancient Latin roots if they were to be used for different, correctly numbered months, or allows for an entirely new, logical naming system. +- **Intuitive Ordering:** By using names that reflect the month's position in the sequence (e.g., First Month, Second Month, etc., or names derived from nature or a new cultural system), the order of the year becomes instantly intuitive. +- **Cultural Consistency:** A coherent naming scheme supports the overall systematic nature of the 13-month, 28-day structure, creating a unified and rational system that lacks the historical baggage and accumulated inconsistencies of the Gregorian calendar. +- **Ease of Learning:** It would be much easier for children and new users of the calendar to remember the month names and their sequence, as the name itself provides a strong clue to its position in the year. For example, proponents of similar historical calendar reforms suggested naming the new 13th month "Sol" to follow the Latin pattern and then correctly placing September, October, November, and December in the 7th through 10th positions.